Faculty and Staff Publications

Authors

Keisha S Ray

Language

English

Publication Date

12-1-2021

Journal

Journal of Medical Humanities

DOI

10.1007/s10912-021-09681-7

PMID

33576930

PMCID

PMC7879396

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

2-12-2021

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

When health professions learners' primary pedagogical experience of Black people and how they become patients is through statistics, it becomes very easy for learners to think of Black people as data points rather than as individuals whose health is often at the mercy of racist institutions. When the human dimension of Black people's health is ignored, specifically the ways that poor health affects individual wellbeing, one of the barriers to proper health for Black patients is how to be seen and considered as a part of a larger problem of systemic racism and institutional injustices as well as individuals whose personal lives are affected by such larger problems. I propose an approach to health professions pedagogy-the experiential race testimonies (ERT) approach-that can change the way health professions learners understand and treat Black patients, thus changing the future of Black health. The ERT approach pairs population data analysis with analysis of personal testimonies and the experiences they convey.

Keywords

Health Occupations, Humans, Racism, Systemic Racism, Black health, Health education, Pedagogy, Racial disparities, Racial inequities

Published Open-Access

yes

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